Dear Associated Press: Let’s Talk About
Political Celebrities and Ghost Writers

posted at 4:33 pm on May 13, 2009 by

Y’know, it was nice of you guys to assign Hilel Italie to write that story suggesting Sarah Palin doesn’t have the brains to write her own book.

Shall we discuss the editorial process behind, say, Bill Clinton’s My Life or Hillary Clinton’s Living History? Between them, the Clintons employed enough ghosts to staff the day shift at Disney World’s “Haunted Mansion” ride.

Having been a Washington, D.C., journalist since 1997, I can assure you that we “talk shop” often enough so that every writer inside the Beltway knows who’s ghosting whom. No need to name names, but suffice it to say that once somebody has served in the Cabinet or been elected Senator, any book published under his name can be assumed to be, at best, a team effort in which the named author was the quarterback. (Or sometimes, as one hears in regard to the Clintons, the meddlesome team owner who insists on second-guessing the editorial quarterback.)

However, since the Associated Press has taken this sudden and keen interest in the subject of potential future presidents and their ghostwriters, perhaps you could be bothered to run down a disturbing theory that has troubled me for several months.

After I founded Authors Against Obama, a reader called to my attention Jack Cashill’s theory that Dreams of My Father was ghost-written. Cashill offered abundant circumstantial evidence to support his theory, and perhaps the mighty AP could assign Hilel Italie to investigate this.

Or, as seems likely, perhaps not.

(Cross-posted at The Other McCain.)

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Well, when it comes to reading, Palin’s obviously less qualified than the Teleprompter-in-Chief.

The Other McCain on May 13, 2009 at 5:30 PM

Everyone who has commented publicly about growing up with Sarah Palin has said she has been a voracious reader all of her life. Her dad has been a career science teacher. She defeated both parties in Alaska in that election for Governor, then once elected forced the oil industry out of the bribing business, and to the negotiating table for a new deal. Among many other accomplishments.

This “narrative” that she can’t read or reason anything is so divorced from reality, that it must collapse under it’s own weight eventually. The interesting thing will be who among our media geniuses will acknowledge that, and who will cling stubbornly to a long dead image that no longer works with the public at large. Got a few guesses?

Brian1972 on May 13, 2009 at 5:46 PM

Wonder if Robert Barnett knows if Ayers helped Obama? Maybe he could tell Palin, if he knows.

(I know, never happen).

cs89 on May 13, 2009 at 9:31 PM

I hope that you have gone to the link because a good case is made about who is the true author of Dreams of my father. It might be circumstantial evidence but the sentence construction points to one person who is a shadowy figure in Obama’s life.

maggieo on May 14, 2009 at 5:05 AM